ALS & Misfolded Proteins

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Researchers Score Against Lou Gehrig's Disease
By Michael Smith, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today
Published: October 05, 2006
Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 5 -- Against the backdrop of the start of baseball's post-season, researchers reported clues to unraveling the mystery of a disease best known striking down New York Yankees first baseman Lou Gehrig nearly 70 years ago. Action Points
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Advise patients who ask that amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease, is a rare neurodegenerative condition that strikes the motor neurons of the spine and brain, making normal movement impossible.


Note that this study suggests ALS and another neurodegenerative disease may have a similar pathogenesis involving a misfolded protein called TDP-43, but caution that the finding has no clinical implications as yet.
An international team of researchers has identified the misfolded protein that causes both amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease, and a less well-known condition, frontotemporal lobar degeneration, according to Virginia Lee, Ph.D., of the University of Pennsylvania.


It is TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43), which has several functions and is found in the nucleus of many cell types, Dr. Lee and colleagues reported in the Oct. 6 issue of Science.


Misfolded proteins are a common motif in neurodegenerative diseases. They are tagged for recycling by the protein ubiquitin, but instead of being broken down they are dumped in the neurons.


But the specific ubiquitinated protein involved in ALS and frontotemporal lobar degeneration had not been identified previously, Dr. Lee said. The finding "resolves a long-standing enigma," she and colleagues noted.


Because the two diseases share clinical features -- dementia often strikes those with ALS and patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration often have motor complications -- the researchers thought it likely that the diseases were related in some way.


Tests using tissue samples showed that the motor neurons of ALS patients and the frontal and temporal neurons of frontotemporal lobar degeneration patients contain large amounts of ubiquitinated TDP-43 in their cytoplasm.


The finding implies that ALS, frontotemporal lobar degeneration, and possibly other neurodegenerative diseases are part of "a spectrum of disorders that share similar pathological mechanisms, culminating in the progressive degeneration of different selectively vulnerable neurons," the researchers concluded.


"It's very exciting that we finally made the connection between dementia and motor neuron disease," Dr. Lee said. "Clinically there's overlap in these two disorders, so it was very tantalizing to see if there was anything to link them biochemically."


The researchers developed monoclonal antibodies to TDP-43, and tested them in 72 post-mortem tissue samples patients with either ALS or frontotemporal lobar degeneration. All 72 cases contained misfolded TDP-43.


"Since many cases were studied, the data became very compelling," Dr. Lee said.


While ALS is well-known because of its link with Gehrig, frontotemporal lobar degeneration is less well-known, according to study co-author John Trojanowksi, M.D., Ph.D., director of Penn's Institute on Aging.


One reason may be its rarity, although it is the second most common cause -- after Alzheimer's disease -- of dementia in people under the age of 65.


"Another reason for (its) relative obscurity is also undoubtedly the shame family members experience with the strange and, at times, bizarre behavior of patients, including disturbing obsessions, larceny, or even sexual deviancy, that may bring the patient to the attention of the legal system rather than to the healthcare system," Dr. Trojanowksi said.


The finding does not immediately imply any clinical benefit, but "it will advance understanding of the pathological processes of (frontotemporal lobar degeneration) and ALS, and possibly of other neurological disorders," commented Richard Hodes, M.D., director of the National Institute on Aging, which financed the research.


Whether the finding turns out to be a home run or a bunt single, Dr. Lee said in an interview, will depend on whether future research shows that TDP-43 is a useful target for new therapies and diagnostic tools
 

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Heat Shock Proteins and Heavy Metals

Induction of stress proteins in human endothelial cells by heavy metal ions and heat shock
M. Wagner, I. Hermanns, F. Bittinger, and C. J. Kirkpatrick
Institute of Pathology, University of Mainz, D-55101 Mainz, Germany

In the present study, we compared the induction of heat shock proteins (HSPs) by heat and heavy metal ions in three different endothelial cell types, namely, human umbilical vein endothelial cells, human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells, and the cell line EA.hy 926. Our results show that especially Zn2+ and Cd2+ are inducers of 70-kDa (HSP70), 60-kDa (HSP60), 32-kDa (HSP32), and 27-kDa (HSP27) HSPs. The strength of inducibility is specific for each HSP. Ni2+ and Co2+ only show an inducible effect at very high concentrations, that is, in the clearly cytotoxic range. Furthermore, we investigated the time course of HSP expression and the involvement of heat shock factor-1. Our study demonstrates that the three endothelial cell types that were under investigation show comparable stress protein expression when treated with heavy metal ions or heat shock. The expression of stress proteins may be used as an early marker for the toxic damage of cells. This damage can be an inducer of acute respiratory distress syndrome in which microvascular endothelial lesions occur early. Our study provides evidence that human umbilical vein endothelial cells or EA.hy 926 cells, which are much more easily isolated and/or cultivated than pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells, could be used as alternative cell culture systems for studies on cellular dysfunction in the lung caused by toxic substances, certainly with respect to the expression of HSPs.
MANY ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES such as heat, certain metals, toxins, and oxidative stress (anoxia, reactive oxygen metabolites) cause changes in the pattern of cellular stress protein expression (4, 9, 19). This group of proteins, referred to as heat shock proteins (HSPs), is divided into subfamilies that are characterized by their molecular mass (for reviews, see Refs. 3, 21, 39). Stress proteins have been highly conserved during evolution and are present in the entire spectrum of organisms from bacteria to human cells. In higher eukaryotes, they have been identified in many different cell types. Indeed, HSPs enable procaryotes as well as higher organisms to tolerate the different forms of stress and to survive, but they also have physiological functions and serve as molecular chaperones (3, 21, 39). Proteins of especially the 70-kDa (HSP70) and 60-kDa (HSP60) HSP families function in protein folding, assembly, and translocation between intracellular compartments (5). Other HSPs are involved in the degradation of misfolded proteins (10). Furthermore, HSPs also play a role in the immune response (33; for a review, see Ref. 24). Many HSPs are constitutively expressed, and in situations of stress, the expression pattern of many HSPs is changed.
Because of their exposed location in the vasculature, endothelial cells are involved in pathological situations such as ischemia and hypoxia, viral and bacterial infections, inflammation, fever, and cancer. Changes in HSP expression by endothelial cells were demonstrated in many of these conditions (23). Other investigators (1, 37, 42) demonstrated the heat- and metal-inducible expression of HSPs in various cell types. The endothelium is a target for metal ions that are transported and distributed by the blood. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to analyze and compare heavy metal ion as well as heat shock effects in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs.
DISCUSSION
We demonstrated that the stress proteins HSP70, HSP60, HSP32, and HSP27 are inducible in human endothelial cells by heat shock and heavy metal ions. In particular, regarding the effects of metals, we show that HSP70 is induced especially by Zn2+ and Cd2+ at the mRNA and protein levels, with Cd2+ still being inductive at lower concentrations. A significant effect of Ni2+ and Co2+ even at high concentrations of 1 or 2 mM on HSP70 expression was not detectable either in Western or in Northern blot analysis. Only treatment of the cells with a 10 mM concentration of Ni2+, which obviously represents marked stress and induced morphological changes such as cytoplasmic retraction, induced elevated levels of HSP70 mRNA.
Besides Zn2+ and Cd2+, arsenite has been described as a very strong inducer of HSP. It was shown by Brown and Rush (2) and Ribeiro et al. (28) that an injection of sodium arsenite into rabbits and rats induces the synthesis of proteins of the HSP70 family.
Furthermore, we analyzed the inducibility of endothelial stress proteins by heat shock at 42.5?C. HSP70 expression was augmented after heat shock in all three endothelial cell types investigated. A time-course study showed that HSP70 mRNA is first increased and then declines, whereas protein expression is maintained much longer. When we analyzed the expression of HSP27, we found that this protein is regulated in a different way in heat-shocked endothelial cells than HSP70. We detected a slight increase in HSP27 mRNA, but the protein level decreased during the first 90 min of heat shock treatment. It must be concluded that the level of HSP27 is not only dependent on the presence of mRNA but that protein stability and protein degradation are important regulatory mechanisms. HSP27 has been implicated in the organization of actin filaments, and it was demonstrated that this function is accompanied by its phosphorylation (17, 18). In addition, it was shown by Huot et al. (12) that oxidative stress mediated by H2O2 induces in HUVECs the reorganization of actin by HSP27, which is phosphorylated via the p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway. Li et al. (20) demonstrated phosphorylation of HSP27 in HUVECs treated with shear stress. Freshney et al. (7) described the identification of new kinases that are involved in the phosphorylation of HSP27. These are not MAP kinases, but they could be related to MAP kinase cascades. These data suggest that phosphorylation may be the main regulatory mechanism for HSP27 activity and not for the protein level. We conclude that in our study HSP27 activity can be enhanced despite the heat-induced decrease of the protein level. Further experiments have to elucidate these HSP27-regulating mechanisms.

There are studies from other laboratories that analyzed the hyperthermic effects in endothelial cells. Rinaldo et al. (29) showed that hyperthermia induces HSP70 in bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells, whereas lipopolysaccharide does not. Another effect of heat on endothelial cells (HUVECs) is the induction of a hyperfibrinolytic state by enhancement of plasminogen activator and plasminogen activator receptor (8). Furthermore, other modulators of stress proteins in endothelial cells have been described. Thus oxidized low-density lipoprotein induces HSP70 as demonstrated with HUVECs and EA.hy 926 cells (43). HSP70 is suggested to play a critical role in atherosclerosis because it was found together with 65-kDa HSP in atherosclerotic plaques (40).

Interestingly, the expression of HSPs was correlated with cellular aging and senescence. Piotrowicz et al. (27) demonstrated that the overexpression of HSP27 in arterial endothelial cells stimulates cell growth and accelerates senescence.

The expression of HSP mRNA is regulated by the inducible transcription factor HSF-1. We could confirm the translocation of HSF-1 from the cytoplasm into the nucleus by immunofluorescence staining. Furthermore, the phosphorylation status of HSF-1 is enhanced in the early phase of heat shock, and this correlates with the induction of HSP70 mRNA.

In the present study, we investigated the induction of HSPs in HUVECs as well as in microvascular endothelial cells that were isolated from the human lung (HPMECs) and in the cell line EA.hy 926, which was established by fusion of HUVECs with the epithelial cell line A549 (6). We show that these different endothelial cell types behave very similarly with regard to the induction of HSPs under stress. For further studies, the cell line EA.hy 926 may be used as a model of endothelial cells for in vitro studies, although the constitutive expression of HSP70 in untreated cells does differ from the situation in primary isolated endothelial cells, which under unstimulated conditions do not express HSP70. The marked similarity of reaction for HUVECs and HPMECs provides evidence that macro- and microvascular endothelial cells (ECs) have no major difference in their HSP response to metal ion treatment. This is of relevance for research on toxic damage in the lung, which can lead to the severe condition of acute respiratory distress syndrome. The latter is known to involve impairment of the pulmonary microcirculation (15). Research activity in the pathogenesis of pulmonary endothelial dysfunction is hampered by the fact that only very few groups are able to obtain and cultivate HPMECs. Our results suggest that it may be valid to use the much more widely available HUVEC model in such studies.

Regarding HSP induction by metal ions, our results clearly show that not all metals may increase the production of stress proteins, and if they do, their effects can be stronger or weaker in comparison to each other. Because some stress proteins are already activated at lower metal concentrations, as demonstrated for Cd2+, the heat shock response is not only a marker for irreversible cytotoxicity (as occurs at higher concentrations) but also for low-level toxicity. Furthermore, the incubation of endothelial cells at 42.5?C did not induce all HSPs under investigation depending on the specific function of each stress protein.
 
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